China Daily

May pushes back parliament­ary Brexit vote again

- By JULIAN SHEA in London julian@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

British Prime Minister Theresa May has pushed back the date for Parliament’s next vote on her proposals for the United Kingdom’s departure from the European Union to one of the last dates possible, March 12, provoking despair from business leaders, politician­s and leading EU officials.

The scheduled date for the event known as Brexit is March 29, but May has yet to get parliament­ary backing for the withdrawal terms she reached with leaders of the remaining 27 EU member states in November.

She first postponed a vote in November, only to suffer a crushing loss when it eventually took place, and then tried again in December, delaying the vote until January, when she suffered the heaviest-ever parliament­ary defeat by any prime minister, losing by 230 votes.

There is no sign that May’s on-going attempts to change her plans are gaining more support — quite the opposite. Last week, three Conservati­ve MPs left the party to join a newly formed Independen­t Group, and there is widespread speculatio­n that more could follow.

Despite this, May has once again delayed the vote, raising the stakes and also increasing the likelihood of a no-deal Brexit, which would see the UK leave the EU without any alternativ­e trading arrangemen­ts, having a major economic and social impact.

The European Parliament’s Brexit chief Guy Verhofstad­t called May’s decision “close to being one of the most reckless” decisions he had seen in politics, one which “only adds to the crippling uncertaint­y for businesses on both sides of the channel and for millions of citizens”.

One of Britain’s leading business groups, the Institute of Directors, said it had “lost faith in the political process” while opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn of the Labour Party said May was “running down the clock” until a time when MPs would be forced “to choose between her bad deal and a disastrous no deal”.

The latest delay will only further increase uncertaint­y for businesses trying to plan how they will operate post-Brexit, given the huge disruption it could entail, as well as causing more misery for ordinary citizens who are uncertain about making such basic decisions as booking flights and holidays.

An alternativ­e to May’s deal or No Deal is to delay Brexit, an idea the prime minister has previously refused to contemplat­e.

Fervent Brexit supporters, who insist Britain leave on the scheduled date, would be furious at what they would regard as a betrayal, but BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg says two Cabinet ministers have said they believed some form of delay could be granted this week.

May insists there is still the chance a deal could be made in time for Brexit to happen on schedule, but as the prospect of no-deal becomes more realistic, the tone from the Cabinet is becoming softer.

“The prime minister is listening and is recognizin­g the fact that we have tried very, very hard in order to secure a deal,” Defence Minister Tobias Ellwood told BBC Radio 4’s

Today program.

When asked if May might announce an extension to the Article 50 withdrawal process upon her return from the EU-Arab League conference in Egypt, he said “You need to wait and hear what she has to say when she gets back”.

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